政治分裂与政府支出:意识形态两极化

Marcela Eslava, Oskar Nupia
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引用次数: 9

摘要

关于所谓的弱政府假说的实证有效性,文献没有达成一致意见。根据这一假设,政治分裂应该导致更高的政府支出。为了使经验证据与理论相协调,本文讨论并检验了一个关于这种关系的新假设:只有在两极分化程度足够高的情况下,碎片化才会对公共支出产生影响。我们对总统制民主国家样本的研究结果表明,执政联盟分裂程度的微小变化会对预算规模产生积极影响,但前提是存在一定程度的两极分化。我们还发现,在总统制民主国家,对财政政策至关重要的是执政联盟内部的分裂和两极分化程度,而不是整个立法机构。对于议会制民主国家,我们发现分裂与公共支出之间的关系模式不稳定。我们的研究结果表明,总统制和议会制之间存在有趣的差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Political Fragmentation and Government Spending: Bringing Ideological Polarization into the Picture
The literature has come to no agreement about the empirical validity of the so-called weak government hypothesis. According to this hypothesis, political fragmentation should lead to higher government expenditure. With the aim of reconciling the empirical evidence with theory, in this paper we discuss and test a new hypothesis about this relationship: that fragmentation should matter for public spending only to the extent that the degree of polarization is high enough. Our results for a sample of presidential democracies show that a marginal change in the level of fragmentation in the governing coalition affects positively the size of the budget, but only if there is some degree of polarization. We also find that what matters for fiscal policy in presidential democracies is the degree of fragmentation and polarization within the governing coalition, rather than in the legislature at large. For parliamentary democracies we find erratic patterns for the relationship between fragmentation and public spending. Our results suggest interesting differences between presidential and parliamentary systems.
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